IOWNER of PROPERTY V NAME _____Cutting-Pike Investment Corporation and Mrs Beverly Sharp Burgess STREET & NUMBER _____P
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Form No. 10-300 (Rev. 10-74) UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR NATIONAL PARK SERVICE NATIONAL REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES INVENTORY -- NOMINATION FORM SEE INSTRUCTIONS IN HOWTO COMPLETE NATIONAL REGISTER FORMS ____________TYPE ALL ENTRIES - COMPLETE APPLICABLE SECTIONS______ I NAME HISTORIC Q Carter Plantation AND/OR COMMON The Carter House |LOCATION S I ) STREET & NUMBER _NOT FOR PUBLICATION CITY, TOWN CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT S pr ingf i e 1 d J&JL, €/ , _ VICINITY OF 6th - Henson Moore STATE CODE COUNTY CODE Louisiana 022 Livings ton 063 HCLASSIFICATION CATEGORY OWNERSHIP STATUS PRESENT USE —DISTRICT —PUBLIC X-OCCUPIED _ AGRICULTURE —MUSEUM X_BUILDING(S) J^PRIVATE —UNOCCUPIED —COMMERCIAL —PARK —STRUCTURE —BOTH _ WORK IN PROGRESS —EDUCATIONAL 1L.PRIVATE RESIDENCE _SITE PUBLIC ACQUISITION ACCESSIBLE —ENTERTAINMENT —RELIGIOUS —OBJECT _ IN PROCESS X-YES: RESTRICTED —GOVERNMENT —SCIENTIFIC —BEING CONSIDERED __YES: UNRESTRICTED —INDUSTRIAL —TRANSPORTATION _NO _ MILITARY _ OTHER: IOWNER OF PROPERTY V NAME _____Cutting-Pike Investment Corporation and Mrs Beverly Sharp Burgess STREET & NUMBER _____P. 0. Box 1672_____._____________ CITY, TOWN STATE Hammond VICINITY OF Louisiana 70404 LOCATION OF LEGAL DESCRIPTION COURTHOUSE, REGISTRY OF DEEDS,ETC L.ivingston Parish Courthouse STREET & NUMBER CITY, TOWN STATE 3 REPRESENTATION IN EXISTING SURVEYS TITLE Louisiana Historic Sites Survey DATE 1978 —FEDERAL JCsTATE _COUNTY —LOCAL DEPOSITORY FOR SURVEY RECORDS gtate Historic Preservation Office CITY, TOWN STATE __________Baton Rouge___________________________ Louisiana DESCRIPTION CONDITION CHECK ONE CHECK ONE _EXCELLENT _DETERIORATED _UNALTERED X—ORIGINALSITE _MOVED DATF . ..••X_GOOD _RUINS X-ALTERED _ FAIR _UNEXPOSED DESCRIBETHE PRESENT AND ORIGINAL (IF KNOWN) PHYSICAL APPEARANCE Carter House and its immediate grounds are surrounded by a pine forest area, The grounds contain a broad lawn area in which the house and a small irregular adjacent lake are set. The landscape features--shrubs, flower beds and the lake--are comparatively recent in origin. The house is approached by means of a dirt driveway which is almost on axis with the central front door. This is an Impressive vista, and the boundaries of the nominated area have been drawn to include it. The boundaries also include the aforementioned grounds because although none of the outbuildings remain, the grounds are still free of intrusions and provide an excellent rural setting for the house. Carter house itself has 1% stories with front and rear galleries and a central hall plan with 2 rooms on each side. The old rear kitchen and dining room, which was a separate building, burned in the late 19th century. It was replaced by a kitchen and dining room wing on the rear of the house. These rooms have since been considerably altered, and a side entry, a cellar complex, utility room, and a port cochere have been appended to the wing. In addition the rear gallery of the house has been filled in and converted into a living room and guest bath. It must be noted that these additions occur at the rear of the house and do not significantly affect the view of the main entrance facade. Moreover the additions have been built in similar materials, with similar roof pitch and fenestration, to the old house. The house is raised approximately three feet above the ground on brick piers. Sills are hewn 12" square with pegged construction at the corners, and some of the sills are 40 feet-long. The house construction is entirely frame with exterior clapboard. However, one of the side walls has been replaced with brick; Because of excessive wear, all the floor boards have been turned over. ;u. .V It- :. ..:•',>•••••- The house has a 5-bay front gallery and stucco work on the facade which is troweled and beveled to resemble cut stone. The columns are modern. Particularly noteworthy are the handsome arched federal dormers. The front door has a Greek revival transom and sidelights. There are four main fireplaces in the house, feeding into two interior chimneys. All fireplace mantels are provincial versions of the Adams type. Most of the interior doors are original. Windows are 6 over 6 with fixed lowered shutters and pintails. 1 SIGNIFICANCE PERIOD AREAS OF SIGNIFICANCE - CHECK AND JUSTIFY BELOW —PREHISTORIC _ARCHEOLOGY-PREHISTORIC —COMMUNITY PLANNING —^LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE —RELIGION __1400-1499 —ARCHEOLOGY-HISTORIC —CONSERVATION __LAW —SCIENCE —1500-1599 _AGRICULTURE —ECONOMICS —LITERATURE —SCULPTURE —1600-1699 ^-ARCHITECTURE —EDUCATION —MILITARY —SOCIAL/HUMANITARIAN —1700-1799 _ART —ENGINEERING __MUSIC —THEATER _Xl 800-1899 —COMMERCE —EXPLORATION/SETTLEMENT —PHILOSOPHY —TRANSPORTATION — 1900- —COMMUNICATIONS —INDUSTRY JCpOLITICS/GOVERNMENT X.OTHER (SPECIFY) —INVENTION Black History SPECIFIC DATES ca. 1820 BUILDER/ARCHITECT Thomas Freeman STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE As an early nineteenth-century house which was built by a free black man and lived in by an important local political figure, the Carter House is significant in the areas of black history and politics/government. It also has a degree of architectural significance. The Carter House is situated on property acquired by James Rheem under a Spanish land grant in 1804. l In about 1817, a free black man named Thomas Freeman acquired the land. 2 Freeman's ownership and residence in the house are documented in a commissioner's report issued in 1820, which states, "Thomas Freeman is entitled to a section of land, situated in the Parish of Saint Helena on which he now resides as an actual settler by purchase from James Rheem." 3 The existence of such a report strongly suggests that Freeman built the extant house since "commissioner's reports" were issued only in cases in which a person had resided on and improved the land in question. According to an article in the Hammond Vindicator published as part of their Becentennial series on "Bloody Tangipahoa," Freeman was the first black man to record a legal transaction in the Greensburg District of east Louisiana A logical extensiqiv of this statement is that Freeman was the first black man to own property in what is now Livingston Parish. The article states also that Freeman was a man of considerable substance and owned a large amount of property. The 1830 Census lists Freeman as the head of a household of free blacks consisting of two adults and five children. In 1838 Freeman sold the land (including the house) to W. L. Breed, an important local political figure. Breed had been sheriff of St. Helena Parish when Livingston Parish was created in 1832. By 1835 he was state representative from Livingston, the first to represent the parish. He was elected state representative again in 1841 and regained the office of sheriff of Livingston Parish in 1843. The 1840 Census lists Breed as head of a household consisting of eleven white persons and 54 black slaves. 7 Breed died of pleurisy at Carter House on November 7, 1843. His obituary states that he was still sheriff and concludes, "The deceased was a true Republican and an honest man and at the time of his death, not only his parish but the state sustained a severe loss." (continued) MAJOR BIBLIOGRAPHICAL REFERENCES "Bicentennial Notes," Hammond Vindicator, June 26, 1975. Briggs, Lyman, Papers. St. Tammany Parish Clerk of Court's Office, Covington. (continued) QJGEOGRAPHICAL DATA ACREAGE OF NOMINATED PROPERTY . i.5 acres UTM REFERENCES I7J3.2J5, |3 ,3 i6 t 6]6 t O,0} B| . I I 1 . 1 . I I.I.I., ZONE EASTING NORTHING ZONE EASTING - NORTHING C| , | I I . I , , I p| , | I I , I , , I 1,1, I_1 VERBAL BOUNDARY DESCRIPTION Boundaries consist of a rectangle which extends 500 ft. NE of the house, 300 ft. SW of the house and 100 ft. to either side (i.e. ._ SE and NW). LIST ALL STATES AND COUNTIES FOR PROPERTIES OVERLAPPING STATE OR COUNTY BOUNDARIES STATE CODE COUNTY CODE STATE CODE COUNTY CODE FORM PREPARED BY NAME/TITLE ______Tom Sharp______ ORGANIZATION DATE Cutting-Pike Investmp.nt October 26, 1978 STREET & NUMBER TELEPHONE P. 0. Box 1672 (504V345-6009 CITY OR TOWN STATE Hammond Louisiana 70404 STATE HISTORIC PRESERVATION OFFICER CERTIFICATION THE EVALUATED SIGNIFICANCE OF THIS PROPERTY WITHIN THE STATE IS: NATIONAL, STATE. LOCAL X As the designated State Historic Preservation Officer for the'Natidhal Historic Preservatio'n ACT. of 1966 (Public Law 89-665), hereby nominate this property for inclusion i/h th0j National Register and certify that it has been evaluated according to the criteria and procedures set forth by the National Nrk Service. TITLE State Historic Preservation Officer DATE Form No. 10-300a (Rev. 10-74) UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR NATIONAL PARK SERVICE NATIONAL REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES INVENTORY -- NOMINATION FORM CONTINUATION SHEET ITEM NUMBER PAGE Subsequent to Breed's ownership the property was acquired by George Richardson, a prominent planter and direct ancestor to the present owners. Richardson lived at Carter House until his death in 1858. His descendants have occupied the house and owned the property continually since that time. Among the prominent members of the family to be connected with the house were: Judge Marcus Tuluis Carter, an early circuit judge for the Greensburg district; William Buckner Rownd, an early surveyor of Livingston Parish; Judge William Scofield Rownd, who served in the Louisiana legislature; Marcus Carter Rownd, a prominent local attorney; Simpson Harvey Sharp, Sheriff and Clerk of Court for Livingston Parish.^ The house and grounds are still in the process of restoration by the present owners, Wiley H. Sharp, Jr. and Beverly Sharp Burgess, who hope to complete the task by the Parish Jubilee in 1980. Mrs. Burgess lives in the house with her two children Margaret and John, Jr., and her husband, the Honorable John R. Burgess, Sr . , a practicing attorney in Livingston and city judge for the town of Walker. The Carter House also enjoys a degree of architectural significance as a local example of a raised plantation house.